<h2>14</h2>
<p>We were unarmed. I had flung my weapon at the thing in the forest; and
Snap had exhausted all his bolts firing at the multitude of green
eyes. Molo and Wyk came with a dive through the air. Two tiny flashes
leaped from them to the rocks behind them, and flung them forward.</p>
<p>Snap and I seized Venza and Anita. It was a second of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span> confusion; then
I saw we would not be able to rise in time. The driving, oncoming
figures were no more than twenty feet away.</p>
<p>"Protect Venza, Snap! Get her behind you!"</p>
<p>Snap shoved Venza behind him; I got myself in front of Anita. We had
almost gained our feet. I tried to thrust Anita and myself violently
upward. We rose, but only a few feet. And then we were struck by the
oncoming body of Wyk, like a huge, light-shelled, three-pound insect
lunging in mid-air against us. The two longest tentacle arms wrapped
around us. Anita twisted and kicked. The gruesome, goggling face of
Wyk thrust itself almost into mine. The hollow voice panted, "I have
you fast."</p>
<p>One of my arms was free and I struck with my fist at the gaping,
upended mouth. There was a crack. My fist sank through the shell; a
cold, sticky ooze spurted out.</p>
<p>Wyk screamed. His encircling arms fell away. The grisly smashed face
was white with ooze and pulp where my fist had gone in.</p>
<p>We had sunk back to the rocks. I kicked the dead body of Wyk away.</p>
<p>"Anita! Swim up!"</p>
<p>"No!"</p>
<p>Sinking beside us were the flailing bodies of Molo, Snap and Venza
were drifting down. They seemed intermingled. Snap was shouting: "No
you don't! Drop that!"</p>
<p>I leaped for them. Something long and thin and glowing was dangling
from Molo's hand. He broke loose from the struggling Snap and Venza;
his feet struck the rocks and he shoved himself backward. My leap had
carried me too high. I saw that in his hand was a six-foot length of
glowing wire. He whirled it. The weight on its end described an arc,
and then he flung the handle. The weighted wire struck Venza and Snap
just as their repulsive ray shot down against the rocks and shoved
them upward. The whirling wire wrapped itself around them, bound them
together. Its glow vanished. Snap had been shouting, "Gregg, come up."
But it died in his throat.</p>
<p>All this while, in those few seconds, I was vaulting over Molo, trying
to get back to the ground to leap again. I saw that Anita was crawling
on the rocks. My gravity cylinder<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span> was at my belt. I had jammed it
there to leave my hands free just as Wyk struck me.</p>
<p>I saw that Snap and Venza, wrapped together by the wire, had dropped
their gravity projector. Their entwined figures went up some fifty
feet and stopped; then began drifting down.</p>
<p>Molo was shouting, "You, Gregg Haljan! Now for you!"</p>
<p>I struck the rocks and fell twenty feet beyond him. I jerked out my
gravity projector, but I did not know what I wanted to do with it. And
in that second I saw that the standing Molo was aiming at me. Directly
over my head the inert bound bodies of Venza and Snap were falling.</p>
<p>A flash leaped over the dark rocks from Molo. There was a split-second
when I thought it was the end of me. But I was still alive. The bodies
of Venza and Snap struck my head and shoulders; knocked me down. I
felt Molo's ray upon me. Not death, but only his gravity ray, like a
giant hand pulling me. Apparently he wanted us alive. I was scrambling
on the rocks, entangled with Venza and Snap. Molo's radiance clung.
All three of us went tumbling forward toward him. I flashed my own
ray, but I was rolling end over end, and it went wild.</p>
<p>I dropped it, saw Molo's beam vanish, saw his upright standing figure
towering above me. Snap, Venza and I were in a heap at his feet. He
leaned down and seized me. "Now, Gregg Haljan, I will teach you not to
try escaping like this!"</p>
<p>With the huge, muscular Martian gripping me, his fist striking for my
face but missing and hitting my shoulder, this was a semblance of
normality. I could understand fighting like this. I wrapped my legs
around him; my fingers reached for his brawny throat as he kicked us
into the air free of the entangling bodies of Snap and Venza.</p>
<p>We rose a few feet and sank back, gripping each other, lunging and
striking. He was very powerful, this Martian. I caught the round
pillar of his throat with my hands. For an instant I shut off his
wind, but I could not hold the grip. He struck me a glancing blow in
the face, then the heel of his hand was under my chin. It forced back
my head, broke my hold on his throat. With returning breath, he gasped
an inhalation. And I heard his exulting words: "You are not strong
enough!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>We rolled and bumped over the rocks. I caught a blow from his fists
full in my face. It was almost the end; I felt my strength going. He
laughed as he struck away my answering swing. I was on my back against
the rocks, with his body on top of me. Then beyond and behind his
hulking shoulder, silhouetted against the sky, I saw Anita rise up.
She was lifting a jagged gray mass of stone, full four feet in
diameter. She poised it, then crashed it down on Molo's head. He sank
away from me; his arms relaxed. The boulder rolled beside him.</p>
<p>It was over now. Wyk was dead; his gruesome body with its smashed face
lay near us. Molo was unconscious, breathing heavily, lying
motionless, with a wound on the back of his head, the blood welling
out, matting his hair.</p>
<p>Anita and I were uninjured, victorious—but what a hollow victory. On
the rocks here, bound together by that strange wire, Snap and Venza
lay inert. We bent over them. The wire was cold to the touch now. It
resisted our efforts to untwine it. We pulled frantically as we
pleaded: "Snap, speak to us! Venza, can't you speak?"</p>
<p>Their eyes were open. I was aware that there was no starlight above
us, but instead, a lurid sky of flying clouds, shot with a greenish
cast. The darkness here was green. The glow of it struck upon the
wide-open staring eyes of Venza and Snap. It seemed that there was
intelligence in those eyes.</p>
<p>"Snap, can't you hear us?"</p>
<p>His eyelids came down and up again, slowly, as though by a horrible
effort. "Can you move, Snap?"</p>
<p>His right eyelid moved. Was his answer, no?</p>
<p>Anita and I had never felt so horrible a sense of aloneness as that
which swept us in those succeeding minutes. A breeze was springing up
in the lurid green night. It came from the mountains. It wafted across
the nearby river, rippling the surface which was now green and sullen.
We did not know where to go, what to do.</p>
<p>We found at last that we could untwist the stiffly clinging wire. We
laid Venza and Snap on the rocks side-by-side, about thirty feet back
from the river. The glowing wire had burned their clothes only a
little, as the current was absorbed by the contact with their bodies.</p>
<p>"Snap, are you in pain?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>His eyes seemed to be trying to talk to me. Anita rose from Venza:
"Oh, Gregg, what shall we do? Can't we carry them?"</p>
<p>But where? To what purpose? Wild thoughts thronged me: Wandl's control
station, bringing chaos and death upon Earth. Mars and Venus. What was
that now to me? I thought of Molo's ship.</p>
<p>"Anita, if we can get to the <i>Star-Streak</i>, seize it and escape from
this world...."</p>
<p>"Carry Snap and Venza there now? But we don't know where it is. Can we
make Molo lead us?"</p>
<p>But Molo lay unconscious. I could not rouse him.</p>
<p>Anita and I were so alone! We clung together.</p>
<p>"Gregg, look at that sky!"</p>
<p>The mounting wind was tugging at us. It whined through the dark
mountain defiles, surged out over the river where the water now was
beginning to toss with waves crossing the swift current. The sky was
shot with green shafts of radiance. Over us, the lowering, leaden
clouds were scudding, riding the wind.</p>
<p>It burst now upon us; I found suddenly that Anita and I were bracing
against it. A puff dislodged us, so that we were blown a dozen feet,
bringing up against a crag, as though we were balloons.</p>
<p>"Anita—this wind—we can't maintain ourselves here. We...."</p>
<p>Horror checked me at the thought of Venza and Snap, lying there on the
rocks. We saw the body of Wyk, like a great dried insect, lifted by
the wind, whirled like a brown leaf over and over, and carried away.</p>
<p>A little pebble came hurtling and struck me. Then a rain of pebbles,
like hailstones was pelting at us.</p>
<p>The storm was probably caused by the axial rotation of Wandl. The
light-beam upon Earth had been attacked by the Wandl control station
without axial rotation. But to attack the beam from Mars, a
manipulation of Wandl was necessary. The planet's rotation was
started; and suddenly checked. It remained night now, here in this
hemisphere. Perhaps there were natural storm tendencies here; perhaps
the operators of the control station were unduly eager, manipulating
the rotation too suddenly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>At all events, it was frightening. I shouted above its whine and the
clatter of the pebbles: "Hold onto me! We'll get to Venza and Snap."</p>
<p>We reached the two inert forms, where they had blown into a niche
between two boulders. "Can't stay here, Anita."</p>
<p>"No! If it begins again!"</p>
<p>"Over there! A cave!"</p>
<p>We got Venza and Snap into it, just as another gust came, with a rain
of dirt and loose stones pelting past outside.</p>
<p>Suddenly I thought of Molo. "Anita, stay here! Must get to Molo."</p>
<p>"Gregg, no!"</p>
<p>"I must. If we can bring him to consciousness, make him tell us where
the <i>Star-Streak</i> is...."</p>
<p>I flung off her restraining hold. The wind had eased up. I leaped out
into it, swimming. The rocks slid by close under me in a swift
sidewise drift. In a moment I would be carried out over the river. It
was a chaos of green, windswept darkness. But there was bursting light
now overhead and rumbling claps, like thunder.</p>
<p>I saw Molo's body where the wind held him pinned against the side of a
flat, ten-foot rock butte, and dove for him, swimming down frantically
until I struck against the rock with a blow that almost knocked the
breath from me. Molo was still obviously unconscious.</p>
<p>How long it took me to get back to Anita, floundering with Molo's
body, I do not know. I managed to keep against the ground; was blown
back, and struggled forward again. The wind came with strange puffs.
In one of the lulls, I hauled Molo through the air and into the cave.</p>
<p>"Gregg!" Anita held to me, her arms around me. "Gregg dear, you were
gone so long!"</p>
<p>I was battered and bruised and breathless. The cave's mouth was like a
ten-foot tunnel leading downward into blackness.</p>
<p>"Gregg, I put Venza and Snap here."</p>
<p>They lay side by side, like two dead bodies, here in the greenish
darkness. We placed Molo with them. Together Anita and I crouched
beside them, clinging to each other, listening to the wild sweep of
the wind outside. The storm had burst into full fury now. It would
whirl us away like<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span> feathers, outside there now. The lightning and
thunder hissed and crashed. Stones and boulders were being flung like
hailstones.</p>
<p>This flimsy, weightless world! It seemed as though the rocks here on
which we were crouching would be shifted and carried away.</p>
<p>"Gregg! Gregg, is this the end?"</p>
<p>A mass of rocks fell at the opening, closing it, so that we were
buried here in the darkness. "Anita, my darling, I will never stop
loving you."</p>
<p>Darkness, with her arms around me and a shuddering world outside. But
here, only Anita and her soft arms.</p>
<p>"Gregg!"</p>
<p>Horror was in her voice. Then I saw what she was seeing. It was not
just Anita and I buried here in the darkness with the bodies of Snap
and Venza and Molo. Something else was here.</p>
<p>From the blackness of the cave, two green, glowing eyes were staring.
Their radiance showed me the outlines of a distended head. An insane
thing? But it was not another of the forest insects. This seemed to be
an animal. The glow of its distended head disclosed a lythe,
horizontal body, seemingly solid and muscled. A chattering, insane
animal, here in the dark with us! We heard mouthing, mumbling words,
and an eerie, cackling laugh as it came padding toward us.</p>
<p>The thing in the cave stared at us as we clung together in the
darkness, transfixed for a moment by horror. The distended head,
ghastly of face with its green glowing eyes, wobbled upon a long,
spindly neck. The eyes seemed luminous of their own internal light.
The radiance from them faintly lighted the black cave so we were able
to see its tawny, hairy body. It was long sleek, the size of an Earth
leopard. A muscled body, with ponderable weight, it was moving toward
us, padding on the rocks.</p>
<p>I recovered my wits and shoved Anita behind me. I crouched on one
knee. There was no escape, nowhere to run. This tunnel was blocked by
a fallen rock mass behind us, with the wild storm raging outside. The
thing was some twenty feet away, where the tunnel broadened into a
black cave of unknown size. Beside me Snap and Venza lay inert, the
still-unconscious Molo with them.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There was nothing to do but crouch here and protect Anita. I waved my
arms, shouted above the outside surge of the storm; my voice
reverberated with a muffled roar in this subterranean darkness.</p>
<p>"Get back! Back! Back, away from me!"</p>
<p>It stopped. Round ears stood up from the bloated head. Then it laughed
again. I felt Anita shoving a rock at my hand, a chunk of rock the
size of my head. "Its face, Gregg! Aim for its face!"</p>
<p>The rock felt like a ball of cork. I flung it and hit the thing on the
body. Its laughter checked abruptly; it crouched, as though gathering
for a spring.</p>
<p>And then I thought of my gravity projector. I flashed on the repulsive
ray to its full intensity.</p>
<p>The tawny body leaped. It came hurtling, but my beam met it in
mid-air. For a second I thought that I had been too late. The thing
was clawing the air; its momentum carried it against the push of my
ray. For an instant it hung, snarling, and then laughed that wild
laugh.</p>
<p>The ray forced it back. It receded through the air, back across the
blackness of the cave, gathering speed until, in a moment it brought
up against the opposite wall some forty feet away. There it hung,
pinned as I held the ray upon it. The body had struck the rocky wall
but the head was uninjured. It was writhing and twisting: the cave was
filled with the reverberations of its screams.</p>
<p>Over the screams, I heard another voice: "Oh Gregg, where are you?"</p>
<p>Snap! Behind me, Anita was moving sidewise toward where Snap and Venza
were lying. The thing pinned in my light stopped its screaming, with
curiosity perhaps at this new sound.</p>
<p>"Snap! We're here, Snap!"</p>
<p>Then Venza's voice: "It's letting me talk. We're better now."</p>
<p>They were recovering, Anita was bending over them. "Gregg, they're all
right. The shock is wearing off, thank God."</p>
<p>But I did not dare move to them. My light on the snarling thing across
the cave held it, but I did not dare to relax my attention.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I called, "Stay with them, Anita." I moved slowly forward, holding the
beam steady. The cave floor was littered with loose stones and
boulders. Ten feet from the pinned animal I selected a great chunk of
rock. It towered in my hand, but the weight of it was only a few
pounds.</p>
<p>The gravity held the animal as though I had pinned it by a pole. From
the distance of a few feet I heaved the boulder. The palpitating head
mashed against the wall. The body and the pulp of the head and the
boulder sank to the floor when I removed the beam.</p>
<p>"Snap, thank God you've recovered! And you, Venza!"</p>
<p>Anita and I sat with them. They had been fully conscious all the
while, but they were out of it now.</p>
<p>An hour passed while we sat crouched, listening to the storm.</p>
<p>"It's letting up," Venza said out of a silence.</p>
<p>Anita was sitting over the prone form of Molo. He had stirred and
mumbled several times.</p>
<p>"Let's see if we can get out of here," Snap suggested.</p>
<p>Rocks had fallen and blocked the only exit from the cave. But to our
strength, even the hugest of the rocks was movable.</p>
<p>"Shall we try it now, Gregg?"</p>
<p>As though we were elephants, heaving and pushing, we struggled with
the litter choking the passage. There was a danger that the whole
thing would cave in on us; but we were careful of that. We tossed the
small rocks aside like pebbles. There was one main mass. Together we
pulled and tugged and shifted it. A small opening was disclosed, large
enough for our bodies. The wind puffed in through it.</p>
<p>The girls called us. Molo had regained consciousness. The blow from
the rock had only stunned him. We bound his wrists with a portion of
his belt which we cut into strips.</p>
<p>"What is it you do with me? Is Wyk dead?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>He lay silent and sullen. "Look here, Molo, we're going to get out of
this, and you're going to help us. If you don't...." The knife which
we had taken from him to cut his belt was in my hand. I drew its blade
lightly across his throat. "Will you talk freely and truthfully?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I will talk the truth."</p>
<p>"Do you know where the control station is located?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>"Not far."</p>
<p>"The hell with that!" Snap burst out. "Get it meshed in your mind,
Molo, that we're in no mood for talk like that. How far is it?"</p>
<p>"On Earth you would call it ten miles."</p>
<p>"In these mountains?"</p>
<p>"He told us it was," said Anita. "Underground."</p>
<p>"Do you know where your ship is?" I persisted.</p>
<p>He told us that it was some thirty miles in another direction, not in
the mountains, but in the outskirts of a city like Wor. It was
equipped and ready for flight, all but the assembling of its crew.</p>
<p>And now we had weapons! Molo was carrying several of the gravity
projectors; two small searchlight beams, little hand torches; and
three electronic ray-guns of short-range size.</p>
<p>Hope filled us. The storm was abating. We could creep upon the single
small control room of the gravity station, where usually but two
operators were stationed. The delicate mechanisms there could be
wrecked.</p>
<p>And then we would seize the <i>Star-Streak</i>. No one would be on the
lookout for us. The fact that Molo's prisoners had escaped was as yet
unknown; he and Wyk had not dared tell it. Meka was back there
waiting. Our absence from the globe dwelling might have been
discovered; but Meka would say that we were with Molo. She was waiting
there, hoping that her brother and Wyk would recapture us. All this we
dragged piecemeal from Molo.</p>
<p>Snap and I shared the gravity projectors and the small electronic
guns. "Let's get started, Gregg. The storm seems over."</p>
<p>It was. We found the purple-red starry night again outside. The river
was lashed white with waves, but they were spent. There was only a
mild warm breeze remaining.</p>
<p>Molo's legs were free, but his wrists were lashed behind him. I hooked
an arm under his, holding him like a huge, but light, oblong bundle.
Snap called, "Ready, Gregg?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>Snap flashed on his gravity ray and mounted, with the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span> girls clinging
to his ankles. Then I followed with Molo. By great arching swoops, we
swung up into the frowning, tumbled mountains.</p>
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